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  • Will Obama Stand Up To Or Smile

    WILL OBAMA STAND UP TO OR SMILE
    by Rabbi Shmuley Boteach

    New Jersey Jewish Standard
    http://www.jstandard.com/index.php/conten t/item/will_obama_stand_up_to_or_smile/7945
    April 24 2009
    NJ

    Truth regardless of consequences

    The picture of the President of the United States smiling broadly as he
    met President Hugo Chavez of Venezuela startled me. Our president is a
    nice guy. Chavez is anything but. The U.S. State Department maintains
    that Chavez has attacked democratic traditions and has put Venezuelan
    democracy on life support with unchecked concentration of power,
    political persecution, and intimidation. Foreign Affairs magazine
    says that Chavez is a power-hungry dictator with autocratic and
    megalomaniacal tendencies whose authoritarian vision and policies are
    a serious threat to his people. In testimony before the U.S. Senate,
    the South American project director for the Center for Strategic
    International Studies said that Chavez's government engages in
    "arresting opposition leaders, torturing some members of the opposition
    (according to human rights organizations), and encouraging, if not
    directing, its squads of Bolivarian Circles to beat up members of
    Congress and intimidate voters -- all with impunity." In spite of
    a presidential term limit of six years, Chavez has suggested that
    he would like to remain in power for 25 years. Hmmm. An autocratic
    dictator who abuses human rights and undermines democracy being
    warmly embraced by the American president. There's something wrong
    with that picture.

    Then there was the incident of Obama's seeming to bow before King
    Abdullah of Saudi Arabia at the G-20 Summit in London. The president's
    people denied it was a bow, but it certainly was a sign of great
    deference from the American president to the dictator of a country
    that just six weeks ago sentenced a 75-year-old woman to 40 lashes
    for having been secluded with her nephew after he delivered bread to
    her home. This is the same Abdullah who, when asked why Saudi Arabia
    prohibits the public practice of religions other than Islam, said,
    "It is absurd to impose on an individual or a society rights that
    are alien to its beliefs or principles."

    Of course Obama is pursuing a renewed relationship with Cuba, a
    country that engages in systematic human rights abuses, including
    torture, arbitrary imprisonment, unfair trials, and extrajudicial
    executions. Censorship is so extensive that Cubans face five-year
    prison sentences for connecting to the Internet illegally. And not
    only is emigration illegal but even discussing it carries a six-month
    prison sentence.

    Watching all this, I wondered what the new standards are. How
    oppressive must a leader be before we determine that he has not
    merited a hug by the democratic standard-bearer of the free world,
    the president of the United States?

    Yes, I get it. We have to speak to our enemies and America has to push
    "reset" on its relationship with many of these countries. We should
    try to change them through charm. But who said the president himself,
    rather than a lower-level diplomat, must do so? And if Obama feels
    that he has to be the one to greet a man like Chavez, must it be
    with the kind of ear-to-ear grin that one might show Girl Scouts
    selling cookies?

    It must surely be disheartening for those who suffer oppression in
    countries like Venezuela, Cuba, and Saudi Arabia to see the American
    president back-slapping their oppressors when these victims have
    always looked up to the United States as their champions.

    In Turkey, Obama boldly declared that "The United States is not, and
    never will be, at war with Islam." But the person who was at war with
    Islam, Saddam Hussein, the man who killed nearly one million Muslims,
    was removed by a country that has already paid with the lives of 4,500
    of its service men and women. The same is true of the Taliban, another
    group that the Obama administration is considering talking with, which
    beat Muslim women in the streets of Afghanistan. Yet the president
    seems reluctant to publicly identify these real enemies of Islam.

    Like many Americans, I have watched our president and have been
    awed by his capacity to draw those who hate us near. He is a man
    of considerable charm and grace. But I have to admit that I am
    increasingly troubled by his seeming inability to call out dictators.

    While he was campaigning for the presidency Obama promised, "As
    president I will recognize the Armenian genocide." But in a press
    conference in Ankara with President Abdullah Gul, he refused to use
    the word "genocide" when challenged by a reporter on the issue.

    Yet, it was Obama's early foreign policy adviser Samantha Power
    of Harvard who wrote "A Problem from Hell," a definitive book on
    the non-American intervention in repeated 20th-century genocides,
    beginning with the genocide perpetrated by the Ottoman Turks that
    killed 1.5 million Armenians between the years of 1915 and 1923. The
    book changed my life. As a Jew who does not want the world to forget
    the Holocaust, I can only imagine the pain of the Armenian community
    as it struggles to have modern Turkey acknowledge the crime. And why
    should modern Turkey not oblige? No one is blaming it for something
    that happened 90 years ago. It is not today's generation that is at
    fault. But nations must come to terms with their own history. Could
    any of us imagine what kind of country that the United States would
    be if it denied that it was responsible for the abomination of
    African-American slavery and segregation?

    All this leads to one important question. Suppose Obama succeeds in
    building friendships with Chavez, Castro, Iran's Mahmoud Ahmadinejad,
    and the Taliban. What then? Does America still get to feel that it
    stands for something? Will we still be the beacon of liberty to the
    rest of the world, or will we have sold out in the name of political
    expediency? And do any of us seriously believe that presidential
    friendship is going to get a megalomaniac like Hugo Chavez to ease
    up on the levers of power, or are we just feeding his ego by showing
    him he can be a tyrant and still have a beer with the president of
    the United States? Will the Iranians really stop enriching uranium
    because of diplomacy rather than economic sanctions?

    I know that the Bush administration made many mistakes and I am fan
    of Obama precisely because of his sunny optimism. But President Bush
    was not, as Chavez once called him, the devil, and it could just be
    that his emphasis on America being the great champion of democracy and
    freedom, a position that was most eloquently articulated by President
    Kennedy in his inaugural address, is a legacy that ought to belong
    to Obama as much as it did to his predecessor.

    Rabbi Shmuley Boteach is the founder of This World: The Values
    Network. He has just published "The Kosher Sutra: Eight Sacred Secrets
    for Reigniting Desire and Restoring Passion for Life."
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